An on-the-lam punk rocker and a young woman obsessed with his band go on an unexpected and epic journey together through the decaying suburbs of the American Midwest.
This movie contains 46 potentially triggering events.
The main character is verbally abusive to his love interest for most of the movie until he stops.
There is a huge fight with a family in their home.
There is another huge fight with a family in their home.
In both homes many things are broken, and there is yelling and physical violence.
This happens often. Then the gas-lighter says " I'm just fucking with you". You can't tell if he is being nice or mean. Maybe he was mean at 1st then changes- this is possible.
Someone gives drugs to a minor. Someone throws this minor on the ground there is physical violence to him. 2 characters who might be in high school, or college are beaten up. So 3 kids under 18 or around 18, are abused, but no one under 12. Ages are not given, but the characters are not over 18 and live with parents.
There is verbal and emotional abuse of a character, for her mental abilities, by pretty much everyone in the movie. Several people also get beat up violently. The movie opens with a really grim drug test study that is hard to watch,similar to torture.
In the opening scene the main character drools and spits from the side effects of a drug trial. And a bully spits in Simon’s face, which Patty repeats to the bully’s later.
No, but the opening scene is in a facility where a drug test is being done, and it reads as a mental institution, before you know the context. It's intense.
While Patty isn’t explicitly autistic, she definitely reads that way (to me, an autistic woman). She deals with a lot of bullying and some employment discrimination.
Kind of but not really, the main character flashes her boobs at someone but its intentionally filmed from very far away and out of focus, so you can't see anything at all.